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Cleopatra (1963) Movie Review
Cleopatra (1963) Review

"Cleopatra (1963)" Overview

Rating: G
1963
Cast and Crew
Director : Joseph L. MankiewiczProducer : Walter Wanger
Screenwiter : Sidney Buchman,Ranald MacDougall,Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Starring : Elizabeth Taylor,Richard Burton,Rex Harrison,Pamela Brown,George Cole,Hume Cronyn,Cesare Danova,Kenneth Haigh,Andrew Keir,Martin Landau,Roddy McDowall,Robert Stephens
It is virtually impossible to separate Cleopatra the movie from Cleopatra the
spectacle -- and that's because they are truly and rarely intertwined.
A legend of Hollywood, the 1963 production of Cleopatra has so much curiosity
surrounding it I hardly know where to start. It was budgeted at $2 million and
eventually cost (up to) $44 million to produce -- close to $300 million in
today's dollars. Liz Taylor almost died during the filming and was given a
tracheotomy to keep her alive. The production was forced to move from Rome to
London and back to Rome again. Two of its stars fell in love (Taylor and
Burton) on the set, ruining both of their marriages. 20th Century Fox
essentially went bankrupt, leading to the ousting of its chief. The first
director was fired after burning $7 million with nothing to show for it. The
second director (Mankiewicz) was fired during editing, only to be rehired when
no one else could finish the picture. Taylor threw up the first time she saw
the finished product. Producer Walter Wanger never worked in Hollywood again.
And the original six-hour epic was cut to a little over three.
The first American cut -- a bit over four hours -- is finally released on DVD,
an exhaustive three-disc set that provides as much information about the movie
as you could possibly want... at least until they unearth the rest of those
hours of footage for an eventual Ultimate Edition of Cleopatra, I'm sure.
But enough of the gossip -- the movie itself is hardly the best film ever
made. Its first half, tracing Cleopatra's dealings with Julius Caesar (Rex
Harrison), dealings which ultimately lead to his downfall, is a great bit of
cinema. It's a tight 1:50 and tells a powerful tale of greed for power and
duplicity in politics. On the famed Ides of March, Caesar gets his
comeuppance, and Mark Antony (Richart Burton) becomes the focus of the film.
His love affair with Cleo is a sick monstrosity, an inexplicable mess of
gluttony and gaudiness that would make Tammy Faye Baker look underdressed
amidst its splendor. Part II of Cleopatra is best left unseen, frankly, and
even though the return of Cleopatra to Rome in a monumental procession is one
of the centerpieces of grandiose filmmaking, there's just no story being told,
at least not one worth watching. Perhaps it had something to do with the fact
that most of the movie was shot without a real script by a director receiving
daily injections just to keep on working.... Better yet to skip over all this
nonsense and head straight to Octavian's rule in I, Claudius.
Cleopatra ruined so many careers it's amazing that it's still remembered mostly
fondly by Hollywood insiders and movie fans. The two-hour documentary
(produced in 2000) included on disc three of the DVD is actually far better
than the actual film, laying out every gory detail of Cleopatra's reign. It's
asp-tastic.
Snake charmer.
Reviewer: Christopher Null
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